Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 1978 )


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  •                       The Attorney                 General             of Texas
    December         19,     1978
    JOHN L. HILL
    Attorney General
    Honorable Hoberl E. Stewnrt                         Opinion No. H-1292
    Commissioner
    Depart men1 of Banking                              He:     Whether    financinl   instilu-
    2601 North Lamar                                    lions     including     banks,      map
    Austin, Texas 78705                                 parliripole    on a fee bnsis in a
    cnsh dispensing machine network
    opcrrited by a corpornle vendor
    without violating branch banking
    prohibitions.
    Dear Commissioner    Stewart:
    You have requested our opinion as lo whether financial          institutions,
    induding banks, may participate      in a cash dispensing machine network on a
    fee basis, without violating article 16, section 16 of the Texas Constitution,
    which prohibits     branch banking,      and article  342-903,    V.T.C.S.,     which
    implements the constitutional    provision. As this branch banking prohibition is
    applicable    lo banks only, we wiJJ not here consider the effect             of the
    participalion    of other  financial~ institutions,  such as savings and loan
    associations and credit unions, Smce their ability        lo participate     in such
    programs is derived from their respective statutes.
    As we understand the nelwork, as described in a proposal submitted to
    you, a corporate vendor desires lo conlracl with financial institutions such as
    banks, savings and loan associations and credit unions, lo provide a cash
    dispensing machine network     lo the customers of such institutions.         The
    corpornle   vendor proposes lo own, maintnin and conlrol the network, lo
    provide all money used and lo n%ume all risks of loss. The machines will he
    located in retail stores, shopping centers cmd other convenient        locations.
    Cuslomcrs will gain access to the machines through use of magnetically
    encoded cards, including    major credit cards.     The sole function     of the
    machines will be lo dispense cash. ‘I’he corporate vendor proposes 1,~ assess
    both the customer and the financial institution R fee for us? of the network.
    In Attorney   (7cnrr‘ll Opiuion Ii,-277 f1974), WC said lhal hnnk:; w?,ich
    participated   in a cash dispensing machine network operated by relail slorf Y
    did no1 thereby violate lhg! constitutional   prohibition against branch banking.
    since llic stores provided lhc cash crud tissumed r4lJrisk of loss. rxcepl for lhe
    I,.    5093
    Honorable   Roberl   E. Stewnrt   -      Pmge 2   (II-1   292)
    fee clement,    the relationship between the banks and the corporrte vendor in the
    present instance is identical to the relationship between the banks and the retail
    merchants in Opinion H-277.        It has been suggested that the payment of such fees
    may give rise to an agency relationship between the bank and the corporate vendor,
    thus converting      each cnsh dispensing machine into nn unlawful         branch bank;
    however,    Texas courts have held that the mere oavment           of money does not
    automatkzally     create    an agency relationship.
    Concrete    Co., 
    221 S.W.2d 584
    , 592 (Teu. Civ. App. -
    Here the coroorate      vendor has no OwllerShip interest in the financial institutions
    involved, eithkr direct or indirect, and its s&vices are open to all banks and other
    qualified institutions.    On the facts you have presented to us, we believe it is clear
    that the corporate      vendor would not be an agent of the bank, and we believe that
    the participating    banks would not be engaged in branch banking.
    In Attorney General Opinion H-277, we were also Rsked to determine whether
    a store which operated a cash dispensing machine WRS unlawfully           engaged in
    banking.   Although you have not posed that question, in our opinion its resolution is
    essential to this inquiry.
    The retail stores in Opinion H-277 were merely making use of sophisticated
    eiectronic  equipment    to assist them in performing a traditional    function of many
    retail establishments,   that of cashing checks for customers.     The substitution of a
    computerized     mnchlne, connected by telephone lines to a customer’s bank, for a
    merchant’s telephone call to the bank for the purpose of verifying a customer’s
    account before cashing his check, wns not deemed a controlling distinction, nor do
    we believe it to be in the present instance.      The only real difference     in the two
    situations arises with regard to the primary activity        of the two entities which
    dispense cash to their customers.         To the retail    merchant,  check cashing is
    ordinarily  incidental   to his primary business activity.     To the corporate vendor
    operating a cash dispensing machine, the dispensing of cash is not only its primary,
    but its only business activity.
    In Brenham Production Credit
    --, Ass’n v. --._
    Zeiss, 
    264 S.W.2d 95
    (Tex. 1953), the
    Supreme Court held that e production        credit nssociation   was not a banking
    corporation for purposes of artmle 7166, V.T.C.S., merely because it lent money to
    customers.   The court observed:
    Historically   a bank served merely as n place for the
    safekeeping of the depositors’ money and even now thnt is a
    primary function of a bank. 9 C.J.S., Banks and Banking, 8
    3, page 31.        The term ‘hank’ now by reason of the
    development     and expansion of the bnnking business does not
    lend itself to an exact definition. 7 Am. Jur.. Banks, 8 2.
    In Kaliski v. Gossett,    Tex. Civ. App., 
    109 S.W.2d 340
    , 344.
    wr. ref., the following     is quotrd with approval from In re
    P.   5094
    .
    Honorable   Robert   E. Stewart    -   Page 3    fR-12g2J
    Prudence Co., 2 Cir., 
    79 F.2d 77
    : ‘StricUy speaking the term
    bank implies n plsce for the deposit of money, as that is the
    most obvious purpose of such en institution.’
    In Warren    v. Shook, 
    91 U.S. 704
    , 23 L&d. 42L the court
    observes that     having a place of business where deposits are
    received and    paid out on checks and where money is loaned
    upon security    ia the substance of the business of .a banker.’
    While, of course, the lending of money Js one of the
    principal functions of a bank, nevertheless there nre many
    agencies authorized  by both state and federal governments
    to lend money, which are not banks nor considered         8s
    such. . . 
    . 264 S.W.2d at 97
    . Thus, the mere act of lending money does net, absent the other
    two primary banking functions -- cashing checks and receiving deposits - render an
    institution 8 bank. It would seem to follow that the merI: act of cashing checks,
    without the concomitant     sctivities of lending money and receiving deposits, is
    likewise insufficient  to permit charscterization   of a particular   institution as a
    “bank.” See also Great Plains Life lnsurence Co. v. First National Bank of Lubbock,
    316 S.W.mTex.        Civ. App. - Amarillo 1958, writ ref’d n.r.e.); Attorney General
    Opinions H-1039 (1977); M-849 (1971); Letter Advisory No. 96 (1975). Since the sole
    function of the machines at issue here is the dispensing of cash, we conclude that,
    under the facts you have furnished us, a corporate vendor opernting such a machine
    would not be engaged in banking in violetion of Texas Jaw.
    gUMMARY
    On the basis of the fects presented, (I bank may participate
    on n fee besis in a cash dispensing machine network operated
    by a corporate    vendor without violating the constitutional
    prohibition  against branch banking, and without the corpo-
    rnle vendor’s thereby being deemed n bank.
    Attorney   General LICTexas
    p.   5095
    :
    .       Honorable
    RobertR.Stewwl -   l'iq.4 (X-1292)
    p. 5096
    

Document Info

Docket Number: H-1292

Judges: John Hill

Filed Date: 7/2/1978

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/18/2017